Andrea > Andrea's Quotes

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  • #1
    Patti Smith
    “When we got to the part where we had to improvise an argument in a poetic language, I got cold feet. "I can't do this," I said. "I don't know what to say."

    "Say anything," he said. "You can't make a mistake when you improvise."

    "What if I mess it up? What if I screw up the rhythm?"

    "You can't," he said. "It's like drumming. If you miss a beat, you create another."

    In this simple exchange, Sam taught me the secret of improvisation, one that I have accessed my whole life.”
    Patti Smith, Just Kids

  • #2
    Ivan E. Coyote
    “Bullies are almost always outnumbered by the bullied. We just need to organize.”
    Ivan Coyote

  • #3
    Libba Bray
    “I thought research would be more glamorous, somehow. I'd give the librarian a secret code word and he'd give me the one book I needed and whisper the necessary page numbers. Like a speakeasy. With books.”
    Libba Bray, The Diviners

  • #4
    Josephine Tey
    “Next Christmas he was going to open this shabby sack of hers... and put something in the money compartment. She would fritter it away, of course, in small unimportances; so that in the end she would not know what she had done with it; but perhaps a series of small satisfactions scattered like sequins over the texture of everyday life was of greater worth than the academic satisfaction of owning a collection of fine objects at the back of a drawer.”
    Josephine Tey, The Daughter of Time

  • #5
    Barry Eisler
    “The person who returns from living abroad isn't the same person who left originally... Your outlook changes. You don't take things for granted that you used to. For instance, I noticed in New York that when one cab cut off another, the driver who got cut off would always yell at the other driver... and I realized this was because Americans assume that the other person intended to do what he did, so they want to teach the person a lesson. But you know, in Japan, people almost never get upset in those situations. Japanese look at other people's mistakes more as something arbitrary, like the weather, I think, not so much as something to get angry about.”
    Barry Eisler, Rain Fall



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